Motherhood and all that jazz

The blurb ob by blob...

Mother, writer and daydreamer. Also chocoholic and chick-flick lover. But mainly mommy. To two boys, at that! When not escorting my Elder One (EO) to karate class, I'm trying to get in as many cuddles as possible from my Younger One (YO). And when not doing either, I'm hard-at-work trying to maintain a steady relationship with my laptop. And as for the Man I Married (MIM), well, let’s just put it this way – even though we share a bedroom, our most meaningful conversations are held over the cell-phone!

Sunday, September 14, 2014

When I was a few weeks pregnant
with you, I went for my first USG with your father. After the doc switched on
the screen, he pointed out this little tadpole with a beating heart. He then
turned the volume up and I heard this urgent, whooshing sound like a tiny fire
engine rolling through shrubs in the land of Lilliput. It was your heartbeat. I
started laughing, soundlessly, my belly trembling with so much love and joy
that my doctor even exclaimed to your very perplexed father, “My God, she’s
shaking so much!” I admit, I cried a little too.

That’s when it hit me...how happy
I was to be getting you; how much I wanted you. And when you finally came, I
couldn’t take my eyes off you and when they finally put you in my arms, I just
refused to let go. I was greedy and selfish and wouldn’t share the perfection
that is you with anyone...not with your tamma or dadu, very grudgingly and
grumpily with your manuku, daduku and yes, even your baba. I had been accused
time and again for not sharing you and even though in my head I knew everyone
was right, but my heart and my arms just couldn’t bear the thought of parting
with you even for a few seconds.

Sometimes, I did worry whether I
was thwarting you. Whether my oak-tree presence in your life stunted you...

But, my beautiful boy, thankfully
my rain cloud like nurturing, couldn’t thwart the sunshine that is you. As far
as nature went, you took after your baba and in this I am glad. So very glad. Your
bright, friendly, sunny nature just oozed out of every pore. You’re confident,
can make friends easily and that two with both genders, talk up a storm and you
make yourself at ease wherever you go. You adjust, you accommodate, you allow for
flaws and lapses in those whom you love.

So, in other words, despite
having a Mamma Bear like me, you shone. And continue to shine. And my prayer
for you is, that you always do.

As always, a year of
unforgettable experiences. Being the kind of Mamma that I am, I just want to
hug you and cuddle you and squish you all the time. Thankfully, you still love
the cuddles. Luckily, we’re a cuddle-bunny family...again, something I am immensely
thankful to your baba for. So yes, I am so grateful that you not only love and
enjoy being hugged and cuddled, you also demand it. But of course, all this is
at home and it’s quite alright by me. But having said all that, I also know
that you are growing up. You have always been curious by nature and I’ve always
encouraged you to come to me with your questions and thankfully, you do. So,
yes, last year, for the first time, we had The Talk. I felt like dying a little
bit inside, but I knew it had to be done. And I remember being grateful and
relieved after it was over. I feel blessed that we share these lines of
communication and I hope that they are always open. Right now, they are and
that’s why you don’t shy away from telling me anything... What I’m trying to
say, is that you also shared a super big secret with me – your first crush!
And, as promised, your secret’s safe with me – I haven’t told anyone! Not even
your baba!

You still have a huge appetite
for reading. Your love for ACK, history and mythology endures and you’re
current favourite is the Percy Jackson series. You’ve finished the first series
and your grandmom is gifting you with the second series and in case you get
book vouchers for your birthday, you’ve already decided you’ll buy the third
series with those! Phew! That’s a lot of love! You and I are always getting
into these Harry Potter vs. Percy Jackson arguments and the battle continues...
You’ve also recently taken to reading newspapers. I have mixed feelings about
that since I know what kind of rubbish is printed these days as well as the
reportage of all the gruesome and violent events all over the world, but it’s
difficult to censor them, so I let you read and then I answer yiur questions
with as much ease and calm that I can muster.

You started karate classes again
after a gap of five years. This is because of your love for all things Japanese,
especially sushi. This love is as strong as your love for all things Spanish,
especially FCB. You’ve even been trying to teach yourself Spanish for a while
now! You love food. You love GK. You’re crazy about dogs and it’s thanks to you
that I know share my home with a big brute of a golden retriever called
Puppito.

You’re precocious. When I try to
distance myself, I see that. I also see that it’s difficult for you to make
lasting friendships and it worries me. It breaks my heart. But I realise that
it’s only because other boys your age just don’t know how to relate to you.

Saturday, September 13, 2014

Tale #1: Saturday. 30th August. I take my younger one to school for his spelling bee. We're ten minutes early, but the boys are already being sorted into different lines, class-wise. I figure out the Class 3 line, tell him he needs to go there & ask him if I can give him a kiss for good-luck. He smiles at me sweetly and sheepishly, and politely says, "Please mamma, not in front if my friends." And thus breaking my heart ever so slightly, he walks away to take his place.

Lucky for him he was polite and said "please" otherwise I'd have grabbed him and planted a wet, slobbery, noisy one on his cheek in front of the whole school!!

Tale #2: Sunday. 31st August. Long drive back home. The Bro suddenly asks me about regular dental check-ups for the boys...something which we, as kids, were subjected to while growing up in America. The YO helpfully pipes up that he, along with his entire KG class (which means three years ago), was taken to a dentist by their teacher when they were learning about "Our Helpers", or, different professions. "You know mamu, we even went to an eye witness!"Stumped by this piece of info, there is a two second silence and before I can share my attempt at the deciphering of his statement, the elder one sternly corrects him,"Uff YO! You mean an optimist!!"

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Today was a lovely day. I finally got to take my boys, the MIM, my MIL, Maa-Janani and the Bro out for lunch to a cafe that I'd been wanting to for quite a while now. Beautiful day, beautiful place, beautiful people. My people.

Rain clouds in the sky. Drizzle and green. The start of Rath Yatra too. Such a perfect day.

Then the EO does something that makes me unhappy and terribly sad. I don't tell, but I don't mince words in telling him about my disappointment. And I cry. All this in the car as the boys, the MIM and I are going to a friend's temple to pull the Rath. To make matters worse, the EO has a history test tomorrow and he fumbled miserably while answering my questions.

We come back home. My pressure has plummeted. I somehow help the YO get his stuff together for school the next day and then lie down. The EO sits down for a relatively late night of studying. At bedtime, the YO comes and lies down next to me since his brother is studying in their room.

It's dark. My phone goes 'zing'. There's a message. As I read it, the light from my phone spills onto my little son, who is lying on his back, his eyes closed, his hands folded in prayer. "What are you doing?" I ask.

"I'm praying to God so that dada does well in his test."

I added my little prayer to his. God, please protect their love for each other.

After a four-days-and-three-nights stay in Bombay, I came home to my boys on Friday. They were there, at the airport, all three of them -- the MIM, the EO and the YO. Breathless with excitement to see me. I saw them as I pushed my trolley over to the conveyor belt where our baggage was being off-loaded; my little one sitting in his father's shoulders...

I hurried to get my luggage so that I could hurry in back to them. Having caught a glimpse if me, my YO was extremely impatient. Standing next to him, bobbing up-and-down with excitement, my EO. The moment they saw me walk out the gates, they ran over to me, the little one through a maze if legs which he deftly manoeuvred as if on a football field. He threw himself into my arms and I picked him up and held him close while the EO wrapped his arms around me. We stood in this huddle of love, a mother and her two sons, on the middle of the airport exit path, with weary travellers passing us by in their urgency to get home or to a hotel, not caring a whit about what anyone thought.

Heaven, for me, is without a doubt, in my sons' arms, where the love I feel is purer than mountain air.

--------------------------------------------

A friend of the MIM's sent him some old snaps if ours, taken in Bombay just before we got married. We showed them to the boys and this is what the EO had to say:

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Of the different
degrees and shades of CSA that I faced, the part that has left the worst taste
in the mouth is that fact that all three of the perpetrators were known to the
family, known to me. And that is of course the most horrifying fact about CSA –
that in 50% of the cases, the victim has been abused by a person that s/he knew
and believed s/he could trust.

This was the
case with me.

I wrote about
the abuse I faced the very first year that CSAAM started. The problem that I
have now, is living with some peripheral memories – how does one survive those?
For example, the uncle who abused me was a great fan of Hindi film music of the
50’s and ‘60’s. At home, his radio would constantly be blaring out songs of
Manna De, Lata Mangeshkar, Mohd. Rafi, Asha Bhonsle and Mukesh. Songs from
movies like ‘Kashmir ki Kali’, ‘Teesri Manzil’, ‘Shagird’ and ‘Mere Sanam’. He
would talk constantly about the songs, the movies, the singers, music
directors, actors and actresses.

My love for the
songs of the Golden Age of Hindi film music comes from my abuser. And there is
a part of me that hates me intensely for it.

How does one
move past that?

I don’t know. I
wish I did. That is my struggle now. Not the memories of abuse...they are my
scars of horror. Not the forgiving of myself...because I KNOW it was NOT my
fault. Not the forgiving of my abusers...because I won’t and I don’t think I am
a bad person because of it.

My struggle is,
how can I love some of the things in my life that are so intrinsically linked
to my abuser?

I think this issue
of mine can also be linked to the greater debate of, “Can One Segregate an
Artist’s Crimes from his Art?” Can one look at a man’s art and regard it as an
entity separate from its creator? Is it
possible to separate the artist from his art?

There are many
men out there, well-known, brilliant men who have written brilliant books, made
brilliant movies, created brilliant music, but who are monsters with
unforgivable pasts. Lewis Carroll was rumoured to have a predilection for
little girls; it is a well-documented fact that he liked photographing them,
often in the nude. Many have suggested that his fondness for his muse for
‘Alice’ was far from normal...it was obsessive, perverted. Science-fiction
author, Arthur C Clark was said to have sexually molested young boys in Sri
Lanka. Then there’s Michael Jackson. Oscar winner Roman Polanski comes
immediately to mind. In more recent times, another Oscar winner’s name crops
up...Woody Allen.

Yes, I know some
of the above mentioned cases haven’t been established. Some are just very, VERY
strong rumours, with an air of “hush-hush but public knowledge” about them. But
they all make you wonder. After all, can there be any smoke without fire?

Yes, I know some
of the above mentioned cases haven’t been established. Some are just very, VERY
strong rumours, with an air of “hush-hush but public knowledge” about them. But
they all make you wonder. After all, can there be any smoke without fire?

And there are
more names. Unfortunately.

But...and it’s a
huge, BIG ‘BUT’, their work is lauded, celebrated...awarded. We all grew up
dancing to ‘Thriller’ and ‘Beat It’. Many of us have cried while watching ‘The
Pianist.’ Often, we find ourselves searching for rabbit holes to fall into, so
that we can discover our own Wonderlands. I wanted to take the next plane to Barcelona
after watching ‘Vicky, Christina and Barcelona.’ And ‘Midnight in Paris’ as
well as ‘Blue Jasmine’ are on my Must-Watch list.

But after
reading Dyaln Farrow’s letter...I don’t know. I just don’t know. Is Woody Allen
guilty? Again, I don’t know. But the letter...the details...the abuse. Cringe-worthy!
And so...I don’t know.

When a Michael
Jackson number comes up on my iPod, do I change it? No, I don’t. The songs are
uploaded by me, I haven’t even erased them. Just like I haven’t erased any old,
Hindi film songs from my iPod either. In fact, I keep adding to them.

And I desperately
want to see ‘Midnight in Paris’ and I just can’t stop hating myself a little
for it.

It is that time of the year again. To poke the dragon. That time of the year when we, a team of people, gear up and talk about that topic which is taboo but which should not be; that topic which is only whispered about, hastily, fearfully, but about which we should be making a loud, deafening din; that topic which many people believe to be an urban legend but is a frightening reality on a depressingly large scale . ‘That topic’ is Child Sexual Abuse.

April 2014 is around the corner, and we are ready to spread the word in our fourth year of CSAAM. Once again, just as we have been doing for the last three years, we talk across social media, via Facebook, twitter and blogs about the menace that is CSA . All through the month of April.

This menace must stop spreading. Children must be made to feel safe. Parents need to know how to talk to their children. Survivors must know that they are not alone. We cannot do all this alone and we count on your support and participation.

Partnering us in our efforts this year will be organisations working in this field like Arpan, Tulir, Human Rights Watch as well as online initiatives like Blogadda and Womens Web. You will see personal testimonials, expert advice, twitter chats, information sources, resources, workshops, an iPhone app and lots and lots of blog posts across the blogosphere.

We understand confronting this issue is quite uncomfortable. But we also know silence is not a solution. We need to talk our minds out. We need to act. We need to support.

If you would like to post on your blogs, do send us a tentative date, so that we can schedule your post. If you would like to participate in a twitterthon, do let us know. Even forwarding this email to anyone you think might be interested in participating and contributing would be very helpful.

If you would like to add to the discussion or know somebody else who would, please note that we welcome entries:

Please remember to send a mail with all necessary links or just your input to csa.awareness.april@gmail.com so that we can track your contribution and make sure that it is not inadvertently lost or missed out.

Some guidelines

Please precede the title of your post with CSAAM April 2014. Then add a hyphen and your title.

Please insert the badge html in your post. If you carry it on your sidebar for the entire month of April too part from just within your post, we would be honoured.

If you refer to sources for information kindly italicise that part of your post which is taken from the source and provide the link to the original source in a bracket.

And finally please avoid graphic descriptions of the abuse. Stay as factual as possible if you’re doing first person accounts.

We need all your help to make this month a success, and are counting on your support.

Thursday, March 20, 2014

A while back, the EO and I were watching "Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara." He was loving it for a number of reasons, such as the songs, the fact that it was based and shot in Spain and he loves all things Spanish (and Japanese, but that's besides the point), the plot-line of going on three daring adventures with one's friends, the camaraderie between the friends, and so on and so forth.

I was loving it primarily for one reason and one reason alone and that reason is named Hrithik. Sigh... Yes, yes, his hair was coloured all wrong in the movie, but have you seen the man dance, people? Have you? He is pure, unadulterated, wild, joyful sex. That's what he is. Sex.

Anyway, so we're watching and loving the movie. My son is being his normal self and asking me hundreds of questions when we're suddenly at that song sequence, "Der Lagi Lejin" and there's a three second visual of Hrithik & Katrina spooning in bed and of course the EO noticed. Now I know what you're going to say...yes, yes, there was a scene earlier in the movie between Farhan (my other love, just btw) and random Spanish chic, but the remote was in my hand at that time and I was able to skip it...not so lucky this time round and besides it was such a blink-and-you'll-miss-it scene -- the only problem was that my boy didn't blink just then. Sigh. Whatchyu gonna do?

Anyway, so he looks at me, shakes his head, rolls his eyes and asks, "Sex"? As nonchalantly as I possibly can, though I feel as if I have been punched hard in the guts, I simply say, "Yes."

Some more head-shaking and eye-rolling happens and then he informs me, very, very seriously, "Mamma, we're not going to tell bhai about all this stuff ever, ok? He doesn't need to know, alright? Even when he's a hundred, ok? Ok?" And while I'm mulling over what to say and trying to form a single, coherent sentence to say, it suddenly dawns on him, "Ooooh! But how will he have children, naa? Hmmm... Ok. We'll tell him a few days before the wedding. Ok? Ok!"

Oh boy! My boy!

If only it were ok, my over-protective, little, big boy. I still can't wrap my head around the fact that YOU know this!! If only it were ok. If only.